It’s the last waltz in the old Big Creek Hall BIG CREEK — You can’t go home again, they say. Paul St. Pierre | PAULITICS & PERSPECTIVES Well, you caa try. They will try here on Sept. 8 wheit the last dance is held in the Big Creek Hall. One last graceful waltz. They’re going to tear the old building down and the ghosts who hang around the place will have tc go somewhere else. Invitations have gone out to just about everyLody who was ever associated with Big Creek, Even if you only twisted an ankle here while going to the outhouse in the dark, you'll get a mimeographed invitation if your address can be found. The form letter is tepped with an ancient photo of 10 cowboys on horses, all wearing !1920-style hats. Some of them are the Scallion boys whose father, an Irish nationalist, hid them from the conscription men of the First World War. “Gus, Ed, Felix and the boys invite you to join us...’’ All of them now long dead, preserved from war but hunted down by the old gentleman with the scythe. When that picture was taken Big Creek was as remote tram the cities of British Columbia as is one of the smatler islands of the Hawaii group. In winters, some people baked the mail in the oven when it arris- ed because the community had been free of colds and it was thought that the virus could travel on paper. Here people lived. worked. had babies, zot sick and got well, made their own musie¢ and dane- ed, all of it on their own ground. Usually it was the ground on which they were born. Isolated, idiosyncratic but also graceful. The old-timers are almost all now gone, some to retirement, some, like old H.E. Church and Frank Witte, buried on their own property. When H.E.’s son Dick died and was buried at Williams Lake, they put his cowboy hat on the coffin so that a thousand years from now, archaeologists could find him. Dick and the coffin might be gone, but that hat, the oldest and toughest hat in all of Canada, will still be there. WESTERN AUCTION 3 P.M. SHARP Sharp, did you say? Sharp on time? In Chilcotin! Well, change must come and that includes summoning people to come to the beat of the super accurate quartz watches of the 1990s. They will be auctioning brass topped hames, sad irons, a hay kaife and Hattie Witte’s treadle sewing machine. Hattie, yes, dead of course, was hospitable, gracious and wildly, incurably optim.stic, the three prime virtues of a ranch wife. The Last Dance is to havea Fioor Manager, as did the dances of long ago. He will announce each number and urge each gen- tleman to select his partner. There will be no canned music. A group called the Old-Time Fid- dlers, including Billy Hutch, whose father had The Old Hutch SAVE MONEY! Now that you’ve shopped the P.N.E. See us First!! We'll Beat ANY PNE. Price! 50% OFF (Limited Stock) * Factory Seconds © Monday-Friday 8 am-5 pm .-{ Open Sat., Sept. fst 10am-2pm ae “or by appt. Friday, September 7. 1990 ~ North Shure News - 9 Nt BOOK NOW! The Lodge will remain open this J year until Thanksgiving: allowing vou the opportunity to § enjoy the spectacular Colours of ed tall in an alpine wilderness LAKES RESORT setting. Hike miles of trails or fish : for trout in any one of tive lakes B.C.'s Hast Ucioue all trom the comfort of a full Hird Comb Adundure service resort. The meals alone are worth the trip. Place, and Levi Perjue from Nmiah Valley. will make the music. There will be no drinking inside the community hail. Drinkers will be expected to sit autside in the front seats of their pickups, taking the stuff out of a brown paper package in the traditional manner. It was also the tradition that profanity and fighting were done outdoors so that the ladies and the babies wrapped in blankets and sleeping in he cloakroom, would not be disturbed. BRANDWALK AT 8 PLM. HORSESHOE PITCHING STOCK DOG DEMONSTRA- TION HOME MADE DINNER, 6 P.M., $7 A PLATE, CHILDREN $4. Also, supper in the dance hall, late at night, served by the ladies, none of your modern buffet-style lineups. Coffee will be boiled in billy cans over an outdoor fire. Yet time and chance have worked their will on this little community. The big change came after the Second World War, with better toads and, later, hydro power. Half of the marriages broke up, a statistic from which sociologists may make what they will. Loggers came, making money at a rate beyond the fondest dreams of the ranchers who settle here. The store closed. The post office closed. Williams Lake came to be within commuting distance. Of the farnilies who lived here FREE SET UP AND WE WILL for the first 75 years of the 20th century, not one member remains eett Oh TAKE AWAY YOUR who owns or controls a working ranch or has a horse trained to dance the quadrille. Ah well, Here’s to the LAST DANCE IN THE BIG CREEK HALL. May it last past the dawn. May people forget the saying that no man can stand twice in the same river. for reservations please call Joan or Bill (604) 499-5848 Or Write: RR. #1, Cawston, B.C. VOX 1CG MAKERS OF THE FAMOUS SIMMONS Beauityrest ALL SIZES IN STOCK QUEEN $1799 (Two piece) NOW $899 - MATTRESSES AND BOX SPRINGS .. URE na arian Fest | Saturday September & 12 NOON to 6:00 p.m. MAIN EVENTS + Al Pichler and the Alpiners The Schuplattler Dance Crew Traditional Bavarian food Beer Tents Sidewalk Sale A day for the whole family to enjoy Sponsored by . 3 Edgemont Village Merchants =A Association Ca : E'S ike \ AG: 5 ty? SS M4 * ravaert —el/ EA